Sadly yes, I found two wild baby rabbits and they both had mites and ticks. There where red small ones and gray gigantic ones. You should never touch a rabbit or any animal that has mites or ticks. They will make you itch and it is untreatable!
Plus they carry diseases to animals and man.
Yes and guess what-then your dog or cat will get them and then they spread into your house. I see it everyday in the summer in my Bugstoppers Pest control business.
Not only for wild rabbits, almost all types of animals that live in the wild have flea! I think you meant flea, instead of fea. But yeah wild rabbits have fleas.
Leave them alone. Mother rabbits will leave their babies while they go find food. Don't pick them up or touch them.
Yes, there are fleas in Alaska. The fleas can be on house pets such as dogs and cats. Fleas can also be on wild animals such as bears.
Wild
they can get fleas from other animals in the wild or if they are in a zoo from other animals in the zoo
Not all rabbits are wild because thay can be pets. hjsonsnoma
wild rabbits are thinner and more quicker and more numerus
yes, because volcanoe rabbits are
Yes, wild cats do hunt rabbits. On many occasions, a cat will hunt the baby rabbits for food.
Myxomatosis is a rabbit disease invented to get rid of wild rabbits eating farmers crops unfortunately the disease can spread to all rabbits tame and wild. Myxomatosis is usually spread by insects (mainly fleas and mosquitoes) or direct contact with affected rabbits, Typical signs of the disease includes, swelling of the lips and swollen eyelids. A common way to avoid this disease is to bring your pet rabbit inside at night when most mosquitoes are out.
You can't buy wild rabbits for sale, only pet rabbits. Wild rabbits, like all wild animals, should be left alone and not domesticated, or caught and sold. It's one thing to hunt wild rabbits, and then sell their body or products (meat, fur), but you shouldn't catch and sell wild rabbits as live animals: there are enough pet rabbits to go around (in fact, in many places, there are too many -- overpopulation).
Yes, rabbits and hares can live wild in the UK. I've seen them!